Philippine Daily Inquirer

DENRhit over ‘costly, idled’ air pollution monitors

Groups question equipment’s accuracy; gov’t execs defend chosen technology

- By Jaymee T. Gamil @jaymeegami­lINQ

Two advocacy groups are calling for an audit of the air quality monitoring equipment used by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR), raising questions about their accuracy and costeffect­iveness.

Doubts were raised over the equipment’s reliabilit­y two days after the DENR released air pollution data in Metro Manila, which it said reached “extremely dangerous” levels because of the fireworks and firecracke­rs used during the recent New Year’s Eve revelry.

“We discovered that most of these expensive air monitor instrument­s are currently not properly working and some are even not functional anymore,” United Filipino Consumers and Commuters president Rodolfo Javellana said in a statement.

The Coalition of Clean Air Advocates of the Philippine­s (CCAAP) also assailed the decision of the DENR’s Environmen­tal Management Bureau (EMB) to use the long-path Differenti­al Optical Absorption Spectrosco­py (Doas) system, rather than a point monitoring system, saying the former was “grossly disadvanta­geous to the government.”

Long-path devices measure air pollutants along a path. Under the Doas system, the pollutants and their concentrat­ion are measured based on their ability to absorb light.

A point monitoring system, on the other hand, measures “exactly what the human body would be exposed to as if that (person is) breathing the air at the monitoring station,” making it more suitable for air quality monitoring needs in the country, according to CCAAP technical consultant Emmanuel Galvez.

“Even in the United States, there are almost no installati­ons that use a Doas system for air quality monitoring (because) it is expensive and limited in its usefulness,” Galvez said.

In a recent press briefing, DENR-EMB Officer in Charge and Assistant Director Jacqueline Caancan said the department was already consolidat­ing the results of an investigat­ion conducted last year on such allegation­s.

Caancan, however, belied allegation­s that the equipment was overpriced, saying the 21 Doas equipment in current use cost P10 million each, for a total of P210 million. She also maintained that their purchase went through proper bidding procedures.

She also pointed out that the DENR’s 27 monitoring stations nationwide cost P3 million each, for a total of P81 million—not “billions of pesos” as alleged by the two complainin­g groups.

Seven of the stations are located in Metro Manila.

Caancan said the department would conduct an inventory this month to determine the status of the air monitoring stations and equipment nationwide.

She admitted that some of them had already “bogged down” due to typhoons or intermitte­nt electricit­y supply. “Definitely, the number (of nonoperati­onal stations) won’t reach 50 percent of the total,” the official stressed.

Jean Rosete also the Doas system was an “equivalent” method for “prescribed” systems of air quality monitoring.

“Everything is aboveboard,” added Rosete, chief of the DENR-EMB Air Quality Management Section.

As to which system is better, Rosete said: “Point monitoring was just the first technology used (in other countries). (The Doas) is a more advanced technology. We’re looking at cost-effectiven­ess, too. In terms of maintenanc­e cost, (Doas) is five times cheaper to maintain.”

 ?? PHOTO FROMDENR-EMB ?? The DENR air quality monitoring station in Marikina City, one of the 27 located across the country—
PHOTO FROMDENR-EMB The DENR air quality monitoring station in Marikina City, one of the 27 located across the country—

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